Access is granted in accordance with the
Protocols for the University Archives and Records Center.
PROVENANCE
Transferred to the University Archives, February 1992
and September 1992.
ARRANGEMENT
The personal records of Professor W. Norman Brown are roughly sorted
into five series and include correspondence, research, professional
organizations, World War II, and Merganthaler. Correspondence with
particular individuals (especially professional colleagues) may be
held in different folders related to particular activities.
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
W(illiam) Norman Brown, founder of the first academic department
of South Asian Studies, spent the early part of his life in India
at Harda and Jubbulpore, Central Provinces. He was sent back to the
United States for an education in 1905. Brown attended Hiram College
Preparatory School, 1905-1907 and Hiram College, 1908; he transferred
to Johns Hopkins, majoring in Greek, and received his Ph.D. in 1916
for his work on Sanskrit under Maurice Bloomfield.
From 1916 to 1919 Brown held the position of the Harrison Research
Fellow at the University of Pennsylvania. From 1919 to 1922 Brown
held the Johnston Fellowship at Johns Hopkins and from 1922 to 1924
professorship of English at the Prince of Wales College in Jammu,
India. Unable to secure a permanent position, Brown filled several
fellowships and teaching posts until 1926 when he was awarded the
chair of Sanskrit at the University of Pennsylvania. From this point
forward Brown worked tirelessly to enhance study of the South Asia
subcontinent.
Brown organized the American Oriental Society in 1926 (which was
absorbed by the American Council of Learned Societies in 1930). By
1936, he was successful in obtaining funding from this group to support
the Chanhu-Daro excavation. World War II provided Brown with the unique
opportunity to establish a center at Penn to train soldiers in the
language and culture of the India area. By the summer of 1947 Brown's
summer program, "India: A Program of Regional Studies" was being offered
at Penn. Offerings continued to be expanded until a full program was
available in the 1949-1950 academic year. After building an extensive
program he became emeritus professor in 1966 (but engaged in teaching
in a partial affiliation through to the 1969-1970 academic year.
Brown held honorary degrees from the West Bengal Government Sanskrit
College, the University of Madras, India, the University of Michigan,
and the University of Pennsylvania. He was curator of Indian art at
the Philadelphia Museum of Art, a member of London's Ceylon Society,
a member of the American Philosophical Society, and advisory editor
for the Encyclopedia Americana, and editor of the journal for and
past president of the American Oriental Society.
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SCOPE AND CONTENT
The documentary record of Professor Brown's career reveals the broad
range of his lifelong interest in every aspect of South Asian scholarship
and cultural activity. His talent in philology and translation was
equaled by an administrative ability to arrange archeological dig
permits, shepherd authors and printers through the publication process,
teach, lecture, consult, publish personal work, travel, and continually
strive for increased institutional and government support for area
related studies.
The personal papers of Professor W. Norman Brown (1892-1975); eminent
Sanskritist and organizer of the first South Asia area studies program
in the U.S., include personal and scholarly correspondence, lecture
notes, drafts and completed papers, and materials related to research,
archeology, travel, and government service. The collection includes
correspondence (letters and documents related to research, organizations,
and individuals), 1920-1973; research notes, 1919-1973; lecture notes,
1919-1965; Chanhu-daro, Sind expedition, 1934-1943; government reports
from the Office of Strategic Services (O.S.S.), 1941-1947; professional
association papers, 1927-1970; and Merganthaler Linotype Company files,
1934-1955 .
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